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10th September is World Suicide Prevention Day. This is the second year that the WSPD theme is “Working Together to Prevent Suicide.” This theme will be used for WSPD 2020 also, and has been chosen as it highlights the most essential ingredient for effective global suicide prevention- collaboration. We all have a role to play and together we can collectively address the challenges presented by suicidal behaviour in society today.

Background Information:

Joining together is critical to preventing suicide. Preventing suicide requires the efforts of many. It takes

family,

friends,

co-workers,

community members,

educators,

religious leaders,

healthcare professionals,

political officials and

governments.

Suicide prevention requires integrative strategies that encompass work at the individual, systems and community level. Research suggests that suicide prevention efforts will be much more effective if they span multiple levels and incorporate multiple interventions.

This requires the involvement of interventions that occur in communities and involve social and policy reforms, as well as interventions that are delivered directly to individuals.

To reach our common goal in preventing suicidal behaviour we as the public, we as organisations, we as legislators and we as members of society must work collaboratively, in a coordinated fashion, using a multidisciplinary approach.

Key Messages:

Over 800,000 people die by suicide annually, representing 1 person every 40 seconds.

Suicide is the 15th leading cause of death globally, account for 1.4% of all deaths

The global suicide rate is 11.4 per 100 000 population

15.0/100 000 for males

8.0/100 000 for females

Suicide is the leading cause of death in people aged 15-24 in many Europeancountries

Globally suicide rates among this age group are higher in males than females

Self-harm largely occurs among older adolescents, and globally is the 2nd leadingcause of death for older adolescent girls

In 2012, 76% of global suicide occurred in low- and middle-income countries39% of which occurred in the South-East Asia Region

In 25 countries (within WHO member states) suicide is currently still criminalized

In an additional 20 countries suicide attempters may be punished with jail
sentences, according to Sharia law

Suicide is the result of a convergence of risk factors including but not limited to

genetic,

psychological,

social and cultural risk factors,

sometimes combined with experiences of trauma and loss

Depression is the most common psychiatric disorder in people who die by suicide

50% of individuals in high income countries who die by suicide have majordepressive disorder at their time of death

For every 1 suicide

25 people make a suicide attempt

135 people are affected by each suicide death

This equates to 108 million people bereaved by suicide worldwide every year

Relatives and close friends of people who die by suicide are a high-risk group for
suicide, due to

the psychological trauma of a suicide loss and potential shared familial and environmental risk,

suicide contagion through the process of social modelling, and

the burden of stigma associated with this loss

Effective suicide prevention strategies need to incorporate public health policy
strategies and healthcare strategies, incorporating measures with the strongestevidence of efficacy such as: